Allstate Insurance Company v. ISpine, PLLC

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedSeptember 21, 2023
Docket2:20-cv-12008
StatusUnknown

This text of Allstate Insurance Company v. ISpine, PLLC (Allstate Insurance Company v. ISpine, PLLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allstate Insurance Company v. ISpine, PLLC, (E.D. Mich. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN SOUTHERN DIVISION

ALLSTATE INSURANCE 2:20-CV-12008-TGB-EAS COMPANY, ET AL., HON. TERRENCE G. BERG

Plaintiffs/Counter- Defendants, vs. ORDER RESOLVING CROSS MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY PERFORMANCE JUDGMENT ORTHOPEDICS OF MICHIGAN (ECF NOS. 100, 101) PLLC ET AL.,

Defendants/Counter -Plaintiffs. In this lawsuit, Allstate Insurance Company and several associated insurers have sued nearly a dozen doctors, medical supply companies, surgical centers, and other medical providers for unjust enrichment, common-law fraud, and for violations of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (“RICO”) Act. All of the Defendants have settled or been dismissed except for Dr. Robert Swift and his company, Performance Orthopedics of Michigan. Plaintiffs accuse Defendants Dr. Swift and Performance Orthopedics of attempting to bill them for services that were not performed or were medically unnecessary. These Defendants are also named as part of a larger corrupt scheme to defraud. Plaintiffs say that other providers double-billed them for services that Swift also claimed to have performed. They further charge that Swift’s role was a

necessary component of schemes to bill Plaintiffs for unnecessary treatments performed and medical equipment issued by others, because he wrote the prescriptions that other entities filled. The parties have filed cross motions for summary judgment. I. BACKGROUND There were originally 11 Defendants in this case. Four were surgical centers or providers of neurological testing or other services:

ISpine PLLC; Surgical Center of Southfield, LLC (also known as “Fountain View Surgery Center”); Northwest Neurology, P.C.; and Performance Orthopedics of Michigan PLLC. Three were “durable medical equipment” suppliers: BRR Medical Supply, Inc.; Gulf Coast Medical Service, LLC; and CCT Medical Supplies, Inc. There were also four individual Defendants: Dr. Stefan Pribil; Dr. Tessy Jenkins; Wesley Barber; and the remaining individual Defendant, Dr. Robert

Swift. Though nearly all of the Defendants have been dismissed, some background on the suit will be helpful to understand the remaining claims against Swift and Performance. Plaintiff Allstate1 accused the Defendants of operating as RICO

enterprises. According to Allstate, the Defendants operated as a “cooperative,” made up of the Defendant entities and certain members of their medical and nonmedical staff. Allstate brought seven RICO counts and seven RICO conspiracy counts. Each count identified one of the seven entity Defendants as a RICO “enterprise,” and named several other Defendants as participating in that enterprise.

Allstate accuses the cooperative of submitting bills for services that either were never performed or were not medically necessary. Allstate says that the surgeon Defendants submitted charges for procedures that never happened. ECF No. 1, PageID.22–27. Allstate also maintains that multiple Defendants routinely submitted bills for the same procedure, service, or piece of medical equipment. Id. at

PageID.28–37. Allstate also claims that some of the medical supplier Defendants issued prescribed medical equipment without the required license. Id. at PageID.37. All Defendants have now been dismissed save for Performance and Dr. Swift. Swift and Performance are accused of participating in the ISpine enterprise, the Fountain View/Surgical Center of Southfield

1 Plaintiffs are five insurance companies under the Allstate umbrella. For simplicity, the Court will refer to the Plaintiffs as “Allstate” in the singular. enterprise, the BRR enterprise, and the Gulf Coast enterprise. Swift is

accused of participating in the Performance enterprise but, because of the way RICO claims must be pled to remain viable, Performance itself is not. Robert Swift, D.O. is a Doctor of Osteopathy and the 100% owner of Performance Orthopedics of Michigan. Swift was also a part-owner and sat on the board of governors of the Surgical Center of Southfield,

which operated under the name “Fountain View Surgery Center.” Swift Dep., ECF No. 101-4, PageID.2586–88. As part of his operating agreement, Swift agreed to conduct at least 30% of his surgeries at the facility. Id. at PageID.2588. Allstate accuses Swift of referring patients to ISpine for unnecessary evaluation and treatment. It also accuses him of

scheduling and conducting unnecessary surgical procedures at Fountain View. It further accuses him of writing prescriptions for unnecessary “durable medical equipment” that were filled by BRR and Gulf Coast. Allstate also accuses Swift, Fountain View, Performance—and the other entities that allegedly submitted bills—of fraudulent billing practices. ECF No. 1, PageID.64. Allstate says that Swift and

Performance deviated from commonly accepted medical billing practices and committed fraud by “unbundling” medical services in their bills. Id. at PageID.65. “Unbundling” is the practice of billing separately for individual components of a procedure or pieces of equipment when

those components or equipment are already integrated into the billing code for the procedure itself—a code that is also billed.2 Id. For example, Allstate says that Defendants billed for the act of “spinal exploration” while also billing for a comprehensive surgical procedure that would necessarily involve a spinal exploration. Id. According to Allstate, Defendants billed for supplies and ordinary

equipment used during procedures while also billing for the procedures themselves. Id. at PageID.66. Allstate also says that all of the bills Defendants submitted dramatically inflated the costs of the procedures billed. Id. at PageID.71. Allstate maintains this was the case whether the procedures were necessary and actually performed, unnecessary and actually performed, or never performed at all.

Throughout the relevant period, Swift’s billing was done by third- party medical billing companies. These experts reviewed Swift’s notes from the procedures he performed and, nominally, were supposed to translate the surgery notices into billing codes and send those codes in

2 At issue in this case is the use of “Current Procedural Terminology” codes or “CPT codes.” This is a comprehensive catalogue of all items, procedures, and services that a doctor might perform. CPT codes, which are promulgated by the American Medical Association (“AMA”), are a kind of universal shorthand that allow doctors, insurers, and others to refer to medical procedures in a standardized way. bills to Allstate. Kayal Dep., ECF No. 101-12, PageID.2937. But

according to two of the billers, Swift exercised significant control over what billing codes were ultimately submitted—much more than other doctors. Id. Indeed, the relationship between Swift and one of the billers broke down because of Swift’s insistence that the billers submit the codes Swift had selected. Jones Dep., ECF No. 101-13, PageID.3018–20. In support of its motion, Allstate has submitted three expert

reports. The first and second are by Doctors Robert Waltrip and James Cosgrove, respectively. See Waltrip Report, ECF No. 101-5; Cosgrove Report, ECF No. 101-6. Doctor Waltrip concluded, among other things, that “a majority” of the procedures for which Swift and Performance billed Allstate actually treated conditions unrelated to an auto accident. ECF No. 101-5, PageID.2628. Waltrip further found that billing records

“frequently include billing codes for surgical procedures that were not actually performed according to the operative record.” Id. at PageID.2629. Doctor Cosgrove reached similar conclusions. The third report was by Tamera Rockholt, a nurse with expertise in medical billing. Rockholt reviewed 39 patients’ bills submitted by Performance for services rendered by Swift and a medical assistant.

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Allstate Insurance Company v. ISpine, PLLC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allstate-insurance-company-v-ispine-pllc-mied-2023.